Remember the haunted-hayride depths of Daoist Hell? Well, that was a cakewalk compared to Singapore's Haw Par Villa. At this unique bemusement park, you can tour the annals of Chinese mythology, such as the 10 Courts of Chinese Hell.

At the Beijing Dongyue Temple, you can visit the various "departments" of the Daoist…
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Haw Par Villa — which is also known as Tiger Balm Park — was built in 1937 by Tiger Balm magnates Aw Boon Haw and Aw Boon Par. After the park was damaged in World War II, Boon Haw's nephew began adding statues of various beings from Chinese mythology.

If tourist sights had a ratings system, the 10 Courts of Hell at Haw Par Villa would be rated R. While you don't expect hell to be a happy place, this version of the netherworld is a slaughterhouse of dismemberment and disembowelment. It is also, strangely enough, a popular family attraction [...] The courts, which judge a person's past life before he or she is reincarnated, are thought to be derived from an Indian Buddhist legend that spread to China during the Tang Dynasty. Each court is presided over by a yama, or emperor, who determines the punishment or reward for those brought before him.

To make matters even creepier, unused statues would be abandoned in the woods behind Haw Par Villa. The Singpore Paranormal Investigators website has a good gallery of the hidden statuary and industrial ruin that abutted the park.

PS: On a related note, about a decade ago I visited a somewhat similar mythological hellhouse in Changhua City, Taiwan (outside of the giant Buddha statue). Do any of our dear readers know this place?